ISIS miniseries (part 1 of 5)
Hidden Lights at the Earth Summit
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The official World Summit on Sustainable Development has failed by
all accounts, which is hardly surprising. But all is not lost. This miniseries
brings you some of the many highlights overlooked by the mainstream media.

Africa Unites Against GM to Opt for Self-sufficiency
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Zambia has ignited a fuse for African solidarity that could launch
the continent on the road to sustainability and self-sufficiency. Dr. Mae-Wan
Ho reports on the real happenings in Johannesburg.

Zambia's chief government scientist, Mwananyanda Mbikusita Lewanika,
known to his friends in the biosafety protocol negotiations as Lewanika,
has become a folk-hero to fellow Africans. This happened after he presented
the Zambian government's case for rejecting GM food aid, first at the Third
World Network teach-in on biotechnology, and again at an impromptu press
conference a day later.

He described how Zambia's president organised a big public debate and
consultation in parliament. The tribal chiefs were invited to listen to
the scientists, along with all other sectors of the country, the farmers,
teachers, religious organisations, business, and so on. "The majority of
the small farmers were against letting GE [genetically engineered] maize
into our country. They said they would rather starve than use GE food."
A week later, the president announced the decision to reject the GM maize,
and not to distribute any GM maize already in the country. He promised
that money will be made available to purchase 300 000 tonnes of food for
the hungry.

Lewanika stressed that 'aid' was not offered to Zambia. Money (US$51
million) was given as a loan to the private sector to import maize from
the United States. When this maize was imported, Zambia was not informed
that it was contaminated with GM maize. "US did not get prior consent from
Zambia before shipping contaminated food grain to us." He said.

"Hunger is a real issue in Zambia, however, there is still time to prepare
and to provide GE-free food." Lewanika said, "We have food, but we have
no capacity to distribute. We must put our house in order."

Offers of GM-free maize have come from Tanzania and Kenya as well as
China and India to make up for the anticipated shortfall after the grain
purchase, and a Christian organization also gave non-GM food after GM aid
was refused.

"The president is under great pressure, nevertheless, to accept GE food,"
Lewanika warned, and urged his fellow Africans to send messages of solidarity
to Zambia, to say, "We are with you!"

That was enough to set his audience alight. They cheered and applauded
loudly. One after another, African delegates stood up to declare solidarity
with Zambia.

Another offer of food came from a minister of Uganda there and then.
She declared, "Let's stop fighting each other, and help one another instead."

"Money is controlling the science," said a delegate from Senegal.

A plant pathologist from Madagascar said he knew all along there were
problems with GMOs. "They are saying to us, eat GMOs or die. Northern companies
are conducting GMO research in Africa. Our laboratories are tied to Northern
countries."

Supporting statements came thick and fast.

"All scientists in Africa should unite against GM."

"Draw the line: enough is enough!"

A delegate from Nigeria congratulated Zambia for taking a courageous
stand, criticised the CGIAR for research that harms Africa, and called
for African unity.

The delegate from Ethiopia, Million Belay, a speaker at the event, condemned
the World Food Programme for "selling the interest of only one country",
the United States.

"Why don't we put our house in order!" was the rallying cry.

African countries are doing just that. Sustainable intensification of
agriculture has doubled and tripled food production in Ethiopia and elsewhere
in the continent (see "Ethiopia to feed herself", this series). Many countries
along the Sahara are pushing back the desert and turning the hills green,
by integrating livestock in their farms and reintroducing traditional water
conservation methods (see "Sustainable agriculture pushing back desert",
Science in Society 2002, 15, 29).

Africa could well be on her way to self-determination and self-sufficiency,
as the result of the United States' widely condemned move to blackmail
hungry nations into accepting GM food.

This could go down in history as the most significant, albeit unintended,
gains of the World Summit.

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This article can be found on the I-SIS website at
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/AfricaRejectsGMAid.php
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